Making it to be Broken

Did you know the Museum provides live glassblowing demonstrations not only in Corning, NY, but also on Celebrity Cruises?  Two Celebrity Cruise ships feature a Corning Museum of Glass Hot Glass Show in a permanent hotshop located on the top deck of the ships.

Both ships were christened with a bottle  handmade (in Celebrity Cruises’ signature blue color) by a Corning Museum of Glass gaffer and filled with local Finger Lakes sparkling wine. On April 23, 2010, a third ship- Celebrity Eclipse – will launch out of Southampton, England, and will feature the Hot Glass Show.

We filmed the gaffers (George Kennard, Don Pierce, Lynn Labarr and John Cowden) making the bottle that will be smashed against Celebrity Eclipse to celebrate its naming.  The 3.0 liter bottle is filled with 2002 Finger Lakes Sparkling Wine from Glenora Wine Cellars.

It took the glassmakers two days to make six bottles, two of which were filled and sent to Celebrity Eclipse. And, yes, that is a pile of  newspaper soaked in water they are using at the end to shape the 2300°F bottle. It’s common practice for glassmakers to use soaked newspaper (local or national – makes no difference!) to shape glass.

Recycling Clear Glass at the Hot Glass Show

George Kennard shows us how the Hot Glass Show recycles clear glass at the end of the day.  About one-third of the demonstration pieces made at the Hot Glass Show are put back into the furnace and are re-used for the next day’s glass demonstrations.

Beadmaking Class with Heather Trimlett

Glass comes in many shapes and sizes and can be made using a variety of techniques. One such technique is mandrel-wound beadmaking, where a flameworker uses a metal rod to wrap glass onto while decorating it with other glass rods at a small torch. Watch Heather Trimlett as she teaches this technique at a beadmaking class at The Studio.